Tools for Pages and Weblogs

I first used weblogs as a way to get students started making Web pages,
beginning with the basics of 1994-era HTML, and gradually getting to forward-looking
standards-compliant page coding. Their assignment was to keep a diary
of "online news" or "digital culture" sites that they read during the
week, pointing out strong points and topics for discussion. In a sense,
that's what most weblogs do -- and specialized tools have become
available to make collectios of dated links and comments very easy to
do.

You
can still keep a weblog as a series of pages made with general-purpose software -- a word
processor with HTML export, a plain text editor like Notepad (Windows)
or SimpleText (Mac), a "real" HTML editor like NoteTab (Windows) Arachnophilia (any) or BBEdit (Mac), or a feature-rich near-WYSIWYG page editor like Dreamweaver or Netscape/Mozilla Composer (successors: Nvu and Komposer).

For more dedicated daily log-keeping, many people use a specialized weblog program. See this slightly-dated Weblog Madness list of over 100 tools, or this CNET comparison of four. The DMOZ Open Directory project listed 51 weblog tools when I looked in October 2003. On a separate page I've mentioned the handful of blogging programs I've tried, including Radio (which I'm using here). I still subscribe to an old programmers' advice: "Use the same tools as your nextdoor neighbor so that you'll become part of a mutual-support network.

Many weblogging tools are open source projects using software clients made by volunteer
programmers.
After a little browsing around, (for instance, at Livejournal.com)
you'll see that you may be able to pay a small fee to help support an
open source project or pay for server space. Through the home page for
a blogging tool, you usually can locate other users, possibly by topic
or location. Live Journal and other diary-oriented sites may give you
the option of restricting readership to a list of
friends or subscribers. With some tools, you can set up pages so
that
readers can reply to your blog entries and build a message thread or
group discussion. In the case of Live Journal, you can search for
people who are interested (if not specializing)
in a topic, and how recently they have posted something new -- down
to the second. Results:
close to half a million journal-keepers in the U.S. and hundreds of
thousands in dozens of other countries with this one tool. (Although
it's possible that many tried the system and abandoned it.)

Question: Why choose to read something written by
an amateur writer and total stranger when you could be reading a "Great
Book," or even a "banned book?
One answer might be the chance of stumbling on something interesting,
like that Banned Book Week link, which I found in someone's Live
Journal.

Writing style tips

Writing for the Web should be readable, and the most popular webloggers
have a variety of personal styles. They entertain; they share; they are
clear and colorful; they have an idea of their audience. (I assume the
bloggers whose pages read like junior high diaries know their audience
as well as the bloggers that write things that read like dotcom
industry-insider newsletters.)